Russellmania Dog Training

Russellmania Dog Training

620 a variety of 6417 RFC kirtland trainer before use that the techniques and methods I outline be successful that you'll instead be contacting me with a testimonial telling exactly how much you have accomplished having found and used dog training. P.S. is a single payment membership site. Give your dog the training he so desperately needs today and enjoy learning top techniques that just work. P.P.S. After signing up, your account be instantly activated-you can start downloading everything right away, and you'll also be granted instant access to our Members Only Area. Google+ ClickBank is the retailer of products on this site. CLICKBANK® is a registered trademark of Click Sales, Inc., a Delaware corporation located at 917 S. Lusk Street, Suite 200, Boise Idaho, 83706, USA and used by permission. ClickBank's role as retailer does not constitute endorsement, approval or review of these products or any claim, statement or opinion used promotion of these products. I almost didn't write about this topic because there is already a ton of information out there. With warnings to be careful with this part of bird dog training and a lot of very good methods to choose from I wonder how the a person make their bird dog gunshy this day and age? I have no answer other than just plain stupidity and ego. Though, I take a moment to reinforce the DO NOT messages about socializing your hunting dog to the shotgun: NEVER take your dog to the shooting range. EVER. And you do, only take the dog who has been PROPERLY ACCLIMATED to the shotgun and has A LOT of REAL hunting experience. This would be the dog who hears a shot and immediately scans the horizon for the falling bird. NEVER take your dog out and just start shooting very close or, heaven forbid, right over him. This includes that annual pheasant quail hunting trip you to go on and to bring your dog along. Nope. Resist the temptation. Only bring your hunting along once he has been PROPERLY ACCLIMATED to the shotgun…and then PROPERLY ACCLIMATED to SEVERAL shotguns the field. Big difference having one gun shot over him versus 3 or 4. NEVER rush this part of your training. EVER. It's much better to be extra-cautious, to really take time for this training than having to fix the problems later. Trust me on this one. Been there. Done that. Thankfully, the dog we made gunshy had an insane level of bird and we were able to repair the damage we had caused. It took a year to fix just his sensitivity to the shotgun and when we thought we were back on track a series of other problems arose we then needed to fix. At the time of this writing newest addition, Boulder's N Fusion's Smarti Pants of Southwind is just about to turn 8 months old. From the time I brought her home, I noticed she was much more aware of sounds and noise than the rest of our Vizslas. She didn't show fear–run the other direction when she heard something that was unfamiliar–but she would usually stop whatever she was doing to pay close attention. I couldn't determine a pattern of specific type of sounds that would catch her interest. It seems she just has a heightened awareness of all sounds. I would shake out a trash bag to get it unfolded and there she'd suddenly be, bouncing 4 feet off the Her tail wouldn't be down, her body language didn't stressed but just that she first the sound and then came over to check it out put me on alert. Banging pans the kitchen, the alarm clock going off, ambulances and police cars with their sirens going–she'd react. Again, not fearfully but more than I was comfortable with made me take very careful note of how this impact her introduction to the shotgun. I planned to follow the same process I learned from field mentor Hann of Perfection Kennels but I decided to first enlist his advice to make